Polish banks face PLN 22bn burden on FX-conversion law.

Polish banks face PLN 22bn burden on FX-conversion law

The bill is traveling towards the Senate, before the bill heads to the President for signing, veto or constitutional review. Its objective is to make the polish banks write off PLN 22 billion from their FX mortgages.

Banks and politicians are starting to act upon the potential effects of the FX-mortgage relief program

The Polish banking sector could have to write off PLN 22 billion from their FX mortgage books as some 33% of CHF-mortgage borrowers would qualify for a relief program recently passed by the Sejm lower house of parliament, financial authority KNF said in an opinion for the Senate upper house.

Banks would be forced to write down PLN 21.9 billion in loans if the bill is approved by the parliament in the current shape, the KNF said of its accounting. Of that sum, write offs on loans granted in 2007-2008 at the most disadvantageous FX rates, would amount to PLN 18.2 billion.

Any additional payments made by clients (potentially to balance the value of installments paid to date in line with terms of the new bill) could decrease the eventual loss after write-downs by some PLN 1.4 billion.

KNF estimates that for the ten surveyed banks, the value of loan write-offs would exceed their annual profits. For six of those banks, the losses tied to write down would exceed three-year earnings, KNF said.

Additionally, the write-offs could also trigger need for capital increases. For six banks, the write-offs would consume over 20% of their equity.

KNF calculations are based on the assumption that all persons eligible would take advantage of the relief program as passed by the lower house. That bill has since gone to the Senate for consideration.

The initial version of the bill, which split the FX loss on conversion evenly between bank and client, would have forced write offs of PLN 13.6 billion, including PLN 11.2 billion on loans granted in 2007-2008.

At issue is a bill passed by the Sejm, under which Polish banks will absorb 90% of the FX loss on conversion of CHF-mortgages to zloty and finance the client’s 10% on preferential terms.

The legislation was amended notably during its final vote in the lower house. One last-minute amendment shifted the split of the FX loss to 90-10 from an initial 50-50 offer. Another set of amendments broadened eligibility.

The bill now travels to the Senate, which is entitled only to recommend changes for lower house final review before the bill heads to the President for signing, veto or constitutional review.